Note that we did choose to pass the box to getNoteLiveData() . Instead you could use AndroidViewModel , which provides access to the Application context, and then call ((App)getApplication()).getBoxStore().boxFor() inside the ViewModel. However, the first approach has the advantage that our ViewModel has no reference to Android classes. This makes it easier to unit test.

Now, when creating the activity or fragment we get the ViewModel, access its LiveData and finally register to observe changes:

The ObjectBoxLiveData will now subscribe to the query and notify observers when the results of the query change, if there is at least one observer. In this example the activity is notified if a note is added or removed. If all observers are destroyed, the LiveData will cancel the subscription to the query.

If you have used ObjectBox observers in the past this might sound familiar. Well, because it is! ObjectBoxLiveData just wraps a DataObserver on the query you give to it.